Google images produced only 3 images of this beast. Two were from
South Carolina and are of preserved animals where all the color is
gone. The third is from University of Delaware and is a beautiful
shot of live (?living) worm. The collar is visible as are the brown
and white striped gills.
don't know about other images of S. benedicti, but you could use the
U Del photo as the standard.
Best,
Les.
At 05:51 AM 1/26/2006, Scott Jones wrote:
>Hi all,
>> I was wondering if anyone out there is actively photographing
> polychaetes under a microscope-- we do it a fair bit in
>our lab when we find something 'new.'
>> I am specifically looking for images of Streblospio benedicti. I
> am fairly certain that this species is mis-represented in
>images on the web.
>>thanks for any help,
>>Scott Jones
>Benthic Ecology Lab
>Smithsonian Marine Station, Fort Pierce, FL
>_______________________________________________
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>Post: Annelida at net.bio.net>Help/archive: http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/annelida>Resources: www.annelida.net
Les Watling
Professor of Oceanography and
Pew Fellow in Marine Conservation
Affiliate, Yale Peabody Museum
Darling Marine Center
University of Maine
Walpole, ME 04573
January to June 2006:
Visiting Professor of Zoology
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Edmondson Hall
Honolulu, HI 96822
cell phone: 808-772-9563